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Vol. I Β· No. 169 Β· 1138 Reports Friday, June 19, 2026
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Warsh: Fed targets broad inflation, not specific grocery prices

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Topics in This Edition

Federal Reserveinflationmonetary policy

Summary

PBS NewsHour clip features Fed Chair Kevin Warsh responding to a question about communicating policy to consumers facing rising grocery prices. Warsh explains that the Fed lacks first-order control over individual prices such as oil, eggs, or milk but focuses on preventing those shocks from spreading through the economy. The segment occurs amid elevated inflation tied to an Iran-related energy shock. Sourcing is direct from Warsh's remarks during a recent appearance; no additional guests or graphics are referenced in the provided transcript.

Editorial Assessment

Warsh's statement reflects the Fed's long-standing approach of targeting headline and core inflation rather than individual commodities, consistent with its dual mandate and historical responses to supply shocks. Viewers may miss that current inflation pressures include a specific geopolitical component (Iran war effects on energy), which the Fed has historically looked through when assessing persistence. The explanation is economically sound and avoids overpromising on price controls. PBS presents the remarks neutrally without editorial overlay. No major inaccuracies or partisan framing detected.

Key Moments

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Fed cannot have a very significant effect on particular prices like oil or a dozen eggs

Standard view of monetary policy; Fed influences aggregate demand via interest rates, not sector-specific supply

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Fed's job is to ensure changes in oil, beef, eggs or milk do not broaden into second- and third-order effects

Matches Fed practice of distinguishing transitory supply shocks from persistent inflation pressures

Sources Consulted

  1. The Fed Explained - Monetary Policy
  2. Food and Energy Price Shocks: What Other Prices Are Affected?
  3. Kevin Warsh takes oath of office as chairman
  4. What Trump's nomination of inflation hawk Kevin Warsh means for the Federal Reserve
  5. Kevin Warsh is now leading the Fed. His main challenge is inflation